Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge (VDK)

Formation of the Volksbund

German soldiers' graves on the Ypres battlefront. Killed on 4th November 1914
Musketier Günther Gräf was buried behind the lines in a churchyard with his comrades.
He has been reburied in Menen German Mlitary cemetery, Block P, Grave 1561.

With the end of the First World War the upkeep of German military cemeteries
in France and Belgium came to an abrupt end. Organizations attached to
the German army which had looked after the graves during the war were
disbanded. The only official military war grave organisation operative
after 1918 was the Central-Nachweise-Amt, a bureau in the Prussian
War Ministry. Under the terms of the Versailles Treaty the responsibility
of this bureau for the maintenance of German military cemeteries outside
Germany's borders was taken out of its hands and handed over to the governments
of the respective countries where German soldiers were buried.

Dr. Siegfried Emmo Eulen, one of the founders of the VDK.

In 1919 Dr. Siegfried Emmo Eulen, a former army officer who had
been in charge of military burials in Poland and Turkey, brought together
a group of like-minded individuals to set up a voluntary association
to look after the German military graves outside Germany. He believed
that the organisation should be privately funded and non-political, and
that membership should be open to all.

Dr Eulen's call for action won support from influential politicians,
literary figures and artists. The new association was named the “Deutsche
Kriegsgräberfürsorge” – literally translated as “Care for German War
Graves” – and the founding committee meeting took place on 26th November
1919. To ensure that the German people were aware that anyone could become
a member of the association, that is, that there was no limitation on
certain classes or political persuasions the word “Volksbund”, meaning
“people's association”, was added on 13th December 1919, giving the organization
the full title of “Volksbund Deutsche Kriegsgräberfürsorge”. On
16th December 1919 the first membership meeting was held in Berlin and the
huge task of the association began.

Aims

The constitutional aims of the newly created Volksbund were:

to construct and maintain cemeteries both abroad and in Germany.

to arrange for remembrance wreaths to be placed on behalf of next of kin.

to provide financial support for relatives' pilgrimages to graves.

to offer help and advice to dependants concerning any matters relating to the
soldier's resting place.

to establish a constructive liaison with the appropriate authorities
in whose land the German soldiers were buried, and to be the means
to learn from the past, to build bridges of friendship and to spread
the word of peace.

The Volksbund Motif

The layout of the “Four Grenadiers Grave” in Poland, which was the inspiration behind the motif of the VDK.

The first publication of the magazine of the association 'Stimme und
Weg' was in early 1921. The front cover featured a photograph of the
'Vier-Grenadier-Grab' – the 'Four Grenadiers Grave' – in Poland
which was designed by Dr. Eulen. The military graves have been removed
from this cemetery over the years, and all that remains now is the overgrown
raised dias on which the crosses stood.

The Motif of the Volksbund

Direction sign for the Fricourt German military cemetery on the Somme battlefield. Note the motif of the VDK
taken from the “Four Grenadiers Grave”.

The image of these crosses was created into a graphic motif in 1926 by
Professor Böhm and has been used more or less in the same form as the
Volksbund's motif ever since. The magazine is still published for the
membership and to advertise the work of the Volksbund.

The motif of the different sized crosses is used as the Volksbund logo and can be seen on signs to the cemeteries. These crosses features in some German cemeteries as an architectural theme in metalwork and stone or basalt crosses.

Building the Cemeteries after the First World War

Feature with the five crosses on the metal entrance gate at Fricourt military cemetery
on the Somme.

By 1929 the Volksbund had completed a survey which estimated that 28 countries
contained about 13,000 German military cemeteries, ranging from large
plots to individual graves. Almost 930,000 – about 50% of the total German
military losses – were buried in France, where the cemeteries roughly
followed the line of the trenches which had divided the opposing sides
on the Western Front. In Belgium there were 134,000 German dead, in Poland
400,000, in the Soviet Union 115,000. Only about one tenth of the 1,937,000
German soldiers killed in the Great War were buried on German soil.

In the early years the Volksbund had little opportunity to work on cemeteries outside Germany. Nevertheless, they
made useful contacts with people outside Germany to find out what state the cemeteries were in and to lay wreaths on
behalf of German families if possible.

Exhumations and Reburials

German soldiers buried in marked graves, such as in the churchyard in the photograph, were moved into large
“collecting” cemeteries. The soldiers named on the graves in this particular photograph were exhumed and reburied. They now
lie in the German military cemetery at Vladslo in Belgium.

The grave of Pionier Karl Bürkle, whose original headstone is now preserved at the Sanctuary Wood museum (Ypres),
was exhumed when the battlefields near Ypres were cleared. He died on 11th December 1914 and was buried
on or near the battlefield. His comrades presumably made a gravestone from the concrete that they had in supply.
At the end of 1914 the German army was beginning to build concrete defences in the early stages of the development
of static trench warfare in the Ypres sector. Karl Bürkle is one of many hundreds of thousands of German
soldiers to have been exhumed and reburied in a formal German military cemetery. He now rests in the German
military cemetery at Menen, in Belgium. His grave location reference is Block O, Grave number 439.

Caring for the German Losses of the Second World War

German gravestone cleared from the battlefield near Ypres after 1918. This stone is one of several at the Hill 62 Sanctuary Wood Museum near Ypres in Belgium.

After the Second World War there were huge new problems – worldwide –
for the Volksbund to overcome. They had to start again from scratch with
the task of taking the losses of the Second World War into their care.
Yet again the German government had to establish a delicate liaison with
all the nations where German military and civilian dead were buried.

In 1966 the Federal Republic of Germany signed
an agreement with France enabling the Volksbund to start work again in
France. It was important to get straight to work on the hundred or so
First World War cemeteries which they had not managed to construct before
the outbreak of the Second World War and which had been more or less abandoned
for thirty years.

Mass graves were provided with new tablets to show the soldiers names,
memorials were erected and vegetation replanted. Directional signs to
the cemeteries were renewed – many had been damaged by vehicles and vandalism
over the years. Renovations to the last of these cemeteries was finally
finished in 1980.

Design and Construction

Grave of Kriegsfreiwilliger Paul Mauk in Lens-Sallaumines cemetery. He is believed to be the youngest German
soldier to be killed in action. He was aged 14 when he died at the Battle of Loretto on 7th June 1915.

In June 1926 the architect Robert Tischler formed a construction team
initially based in Munich (it moved to Kassel in 1967) to take on the
task of erecting and building memorials and cemeteries. It was decided
not to have a single architectural scheme like the British, American and
French style of uniform gravestone, cross of sacrifice or national flag.
Instead, the plan was to set out the gardens and memorials so that they
would blend in with the natural features of the local area as far as possible.

From the beginning the consideration for the long-term was very important
to the Volksbund. Robert Tischler and the team were given a task to construct
the cemeteries using architectural and horticultural features which would
preserve the theme of 'Remembrance', as a reminder of what had happened.
At the same time the team had to consider the need for low-cost maintenance.
Gardening had to be kept to a minimum, bearing in mind that in most cases
the goodwill and assistance of local volunteers had to be relied on for
regular maintenance like mowing the grass.

The Volksbund Today

Wreaths at Fricourt German cemetery on the Somme battlefield.

The work of the Volksbund is now officially carried out on behalf of
the German government although the Volksbund is still funded by donations
from the German people and the membership.

Online Search

It is possible to search the VDK register of military deaths online at the VDK website.